Keyboard Ranker

Glossary

The mechanical keyboard terms behind our rankings — switches, layouts, build quality, and the spec language we use when we explain why a board places where it does.

#

65% layout

Compact layout keeping arrows and a few nav keys (~68 keys). We weigh its compactness against the learning curve of layered navigation.

See also: Tenkeyless (TKL), Layer

A

ABS components

Common, smoother keycap plastic prone to shine over time. Not a disqualifier — many good boards ship ABS and caps are replaceable.

See also: PBT, Keycaps

Actuation force switches

Force in grams-force to register a keypress. We treat it as a fit factor, not a score: light switches suit fast typists, heavier ones resist accidental presses. We never rank a board down for a preference-based spec.

See also: Linear switch, Tactile switch, Bottom-out force

B

Bottom-out force switches

Force needed to press a key fully to the bottom. Often higher than actuation force; relevant for typists who bottom out every keystroke.

See also: Actuation force

C

Clicky switch switches

Tactile plus an audible click. We flag it as a context-sensitive choice (loud) and rank it within its category, not against quiet switches.

See also: Tactile switch, Linear switch

F

Form factor layout

The board's size class — full-size, TKL, 75%, 65%, 60%. We rank within form factors, because a 60% and a full-size serve different needs and aren't directly comparable.

See also: Tenkeyless (TKL), 65%

G

Gasket mount build

Plate suspended on gaskets for a softer typing feel. Common in higher-tier boards; a contributing, not decisive, factor in our build-quality assessment.

See also: Mounting style, Tray mount

H

Hot-swap build

Tool-free switch replacement via socketed PCB. We treat it as a positive longevity and repairability factor, weighted higher for beginners.

See also: Soldered, PCB

K

Keycaps components

Material (PBT/ABS), profile, and legend method. We note keycap quality as a value factor since cheap caps are an easy, cheap upgrade.

See also: PBT, ABS, Stabilizers

L

Layer layout

A secondary key set accessed via a modifier. We factor layer ergonomics and remappability into rankings of smaller boards.

See also: 65%, QMK / VIA

Linear switch switches

Smooth travel, no bump or click. We assess linears on consistency and scratch, not on a single 'best' verdict, since use case dominates.

See also: Tactile switch, Clicky switch

M

Mounting style build

How the plate/PCB attaches to the case — tray, top, gasket, etc. It shapes typing feel and sound; we describe its effect rather than scoring feel as if it were objective.

See also: Gasket mount, Tray mount

P

PBT components

Dense, shine-resistant keycap plastic, generally preferred for longevity. A small positive in value scoring when included stock.

See also: ABS, Keycaps

PCB build

The circuit board that registers keypresses; determines hot-swap, wireless, RGB, and firmware support. A frequent source of value differences between similar-looking boards.

See also: Hot-swap, QMK / VIA

Polling rate firmware

How often the board reports state, in Hz. 1000 Hz is standard; we note diminishing returns above it rather than treating higher numbers as better.

See also: Wireless

Q

QMK / VIA firmware

Open-source firmware (QMK) and its GUI configurator (VIA). Strong support is a durable value advantage we explicitly reward in rankings.

See also: Layer, PCB

S

Soldered build

Permanently fixed switches. Not penalized in our rankings — it's common at every price tier and only matters if you plan to swap switches.

See also: Hot-swap

Stabilizers components

Mechanisms keeping wide keys level. Stock stabilizer quality strongly affects out-of-box feel and is one of the few build details we weight heavily.

See also: Keycaps

T

Tactile switch switches

A bump at actuation without a click. We grade tactiles on bump definition and consistency rather than declaring one universally superior.

See also: Linear switch, Clicky switch

Tenkeyless (TKL) layout

Full-size without the numpad (~87 keys). A frequent value sweet spot in our rankings: ergonomic desk savings with no functional layer compromises.

See also: Form factor, 65%

Tray mount build

PCB screwed to case posts — the most common budget style. Adequate; we don't down-rank a board solely for using it.

See also: Mounting style, Gasket mount

V

Value tier methodology

Our internal price banding (budget, mid, high-end). Rankings are reported within tiers so a $40 board isn't unfairly compared against a $200 one.

See also: Form factor

W

Wireless connectivity

2.4 GHz (near-wired latency, best for gaming) vs Bluetooth (multi-device convenience, slightly higher latency). We rank wireless boards on the connection that matches their intended use.

See also: Polling rate